All Chemistry World articles in February 2017 – Page 5
-
Business
Syngenta subsidiary faces fine over pesticide exposure
US environment agency wants firm to pay $5 million after workers hospitalised after coming into contact with chlorpyrifos
-
News
Trump’s cabinet picks worry science community
Selections prompt fears of roll-back on environmental research and mass reorganisations of science agencies
-
Business
Death sentence for head of Tianjin explosion firm
48 Ruihai Logistics staff and government officials also sentenced
-
Business
Washington state sues Monsanto over PCBs
Attorney general wants to recoup damages and cleanup costs related to polychlorinated biphenyls
-
Business
Trump names Dow Chief to head US manufacturing council
US president-elect appoints Andrew Liveris, despite lacking appropriate authority
-
Research
Images of van der Waals forces prompt controversy
STM pictures show ridges between xenon atoms, but are they linked to increased electron density?
-
Research
Traffic light label indicates food freshness
Ammonia gas diffusion basis for inexpensive colour-changing food freshness label
-
News
Big budget boost for US medical research
Cancer, precision medicine and health research receive funding boost in bill derided by some as a giveaway for pharma
-
Research
Chemoluminescent nanoparticles detect multiple deadly viruses in one go
A detection system can test for multiple viruses in one sample
-
Business
Boehringer Ingelheim sheds more jobs in the US
Over 240 staff to go as company refocuses on immuno-oncology
-
Research
Silly Putty gets smart with graphene augmentation
Material is so sensitive to deformation it can pick up the footfalls of a tiny spider
-
News
Wellcome Trust pledges £118 million for research centres
Charity will fund 14 new and existing research centres over the next five years
-
News
UK government to invest £60 million in new manufacturing research hubs
Research at six new centres will aim to boost manufacturing in the UK
-
Research
Protein’s wobbles after electric shocks reveal inner workings
New twist on x-ray crystallography could simply reveal functional regions of proteins
-
Research
Bouncing Leidenfrost droplets seem to defy gravity
Scientists uncover why charged droplets on a hot surface bounce progressively higher
-
Research
Chemists find mummified legs may belong to Queen Nefertari
Gas chromatography reveals legs belong to one of Egypt’s lost queens
- Previous Page
- Page1
- Page2
- Page3
- Page4
- Page5
- Next Page